From: MSE's Money Tips - Tuesday Jul 04, 2023 07:48 pm
MoneySavingExpert's Money Tips Email
Plus... 0%s dropping, £133 of No7 £40, free £175 + cheap overseas spending, Premium Bond rate rising
                                                           
 
 
 
DON'T believe the fake 'Martin Lewis' or 'MSE' ads
Lots of scam ads litter social media and even newspaper websites - some of these lie that we or Martin promote Bitcoin, binary trading etc. See Fake ads warning.

 
 
 

It's the bonfire of the 0% balance transfers as banks dump best deals

Paying interest on credit card debt? CHECK ASAP if you can save £100s switching to 0%, as deals get worse by the day


Last week, we warned of rumours that some lenders were on the brink of pulling top 0% balance transfer deals. Sadly they then did, and we don't think it'll stop here. So if you've existing debt, don't delay. A balance transfer is the key cost-cutting weapon - it's where you get a new card that pays off debt on old credit and store cards for you, so you owe it instead, but at 0% interest. That means more of your repayments clear the actual debt rather than just covering interest. It's worth starting by looking at how some of last week's best buys have changed...

NatWest longer (apply*) 30mths 0% (2.99% fee) 23.9% rep APR after Virgin Money (apply*) 31mths 0% 29mths 0% (3% fee) 23.9% rep APR after Barclaycard (apply*) 'Up to' 30mths 0% (3.45% fee) 24.9% rep APR after Tesco Bank (apply*) 'Up to' 30mths 0% 'Up to' 27mths (3.49% fee) 22.9% rep APR after Halifax (apply*) 'Up to' 29mths 0% 'Up to' 25mths (3.49% fee) 22.9% rep APR after M&S Bank (apply*) 28mths 0% (2.99% fee, min £5) 23.9% rep APR after NatWest NO-FEE (apply*) 19mths 0% NO-FEE 23.9% rep APR after
HOW LAST WEEK'S 0% DEBT-SHIFTING BEST BUYS HAVE GOT WORSE
Links via MSE's eligibility calc, as acceptance chances are crucial

Three rules to help pick which card is right for you:

Go for the lowest fee, within a 0% time long enough to clear your debt. Most balance transfer deals charge a one-off % fee of the debt transferred (eg, 3% is £30 per £1,000 transferred) - so you want to minimise that. If you can repay within 19mths the NatWest NO-FEE* card is an easy winner, as there's no cost at all. If you're unsure, play safe and go for the longest card you can get, as the fee is less important than making sure you stay on 0%.

MSE's Credit Card Eligibility Calculator.Realism counts, ensure you're comparing the cards that are likely to accept you. To avoid rejection, the best route is to spend two minutes on a 0% eligibility calculator. This shows your bespoke acceptance odds for most top cards, so you can minimise applications - which mark your credit file - protecting your ability to get future credit.

If you've a good chance of a non 'up to' card, it's likely the winner. With 'up to' cards, even if accepted, you may be given a shorter 0% and a higher fee. So unless the eligibility calculator shows you a guaranteed rate for an 'up to' card, if you've an equally good chance of a similar non 'up to' card, then these are safer as you know if you're accepted you'll definitely get the full deal. Getting a card? ALWAYS follow the Balance Transfer Golden Rules:
a) Never miss the min monthly repayment, or you could lose the 0% deal and it'll cost far more.
b) Clear the card (or balance-transfer again) before the 0% ends, or the rate rockets to the higher APR.
c) Don't spend or withdraw cash. It usually isn't at the cheap rate and withdrawals hit your ability to get future credit.
d) The balance transfer must usually be done within 1 to 3mths to get the 0% and any cashback - check your card.

Quick balance transfer FAQs (click links for Martin's answers)
Q. Is it worth applying if my eligibility odds are low? | Q. What if my credit limit isn't big enough? | Q. Can I shift debt to existing cards too? | Q. Should I try to pay off my biggest debt first? SPOILER: NO.

Full help and info, including options for poorer credit scorers, in Best balance transfers.

 
Martin: Why are energy standing charges so high? What can be done about it? You pay £300/yr just for having gas & elec even if you don't use it. That's a moral hazard. See Martin's new Standing charges must be lowered blog.

Ends Mon. 1/3 off digital railcards - 1yr £20 (normally £30), 3yr £46 (normally £70). MSE Blagged. Get a third off most train travel, including 16 to 25 | 26 to 30 | Family & Friends | Two Together | Senior. See Railcard code.

Amazon 'Prime Day' is next Tue/Wed, we get our crystal ball out. See Prime Day predictions, duds & tips.

New. Cheap way to spend abroad and FREE £175

The cheapest way to spend abroad is the right plastic. Most cards add a 3% fee on top of the near-perfect exchange rates the banks themselves get. Specialist cards don't, so you get the near-perfect rate in every country, every time you go away. Full help in Top cards for travelling abroad, but there's news:

- New. FREE £175 bank switch, with top service, and now cheap overseas spending. New First Direct* bank account customers get £175 to switch to it, a 7% linked regular saver, £250 0% overdraft and 90% 'great' rated customer service. Plus, it's now dropped all its debit (not credit) card overseas fees. Switching help & options: Best bank accounts. Existing First Direct customer help: First Direct drops overseas feesAlternative: Chase debit card* - you needn't switch bank, there's no hard credit-check and you get 1% spending cashback (max £15/mth).

- Ends Wed. Top specialist card gives £20 cashback. The Halifax Clarity credit card (link goes via our eligibility calc, or apply*) is a specialist overseas card, plus until Wed there's £20 cashback on your first purchase (even just 1p) within 90 days. As it's a credit card, only get it if you'll always pay IN FULL every month, or the 22.9% rep APR dwarves use gain, plus even then you'll pay interest on cash withdrawals, so best to spend on it instead. Alternative: Barclaycard Rewards credit card has no ATM interest and gives 0.25% spending cashback.

- Just want cash? Use our Travel Money Max comparison of 26 bureaux.


Premium Bond prize rate will rise to 4% in August - are they worth it? It's the highest rate since 2007, but most people with typical luck won't get that & top easy-access savings pay more. See Premium Bonds analysis.

£133 of No7 beauty & skincare for £40. Nine-piece set. See full info and sign up to the wait list to get early access.

'I was a non-believer - then I saved £850 on my car insurance.' Our success of the week comes from Krishna, who said: "I read lots of MSE testimonials saying how people halved their car insurance [using our Compare+ tool]. I was a non-believer until my quote went down from £1,500 a month before my insurance expired to an unbelievable £650 21 days before expiry. Thanks for all the hard work behind MSE." Please send us your MoneySaving successes (on this, or 'owt else).

Are you missing out on £100,000+?, meter reading week and Dead Ringers... All in the new The Martin Lewis Podcast - listen through BBC Sounds | Apple | Spotify and more.

 
 

AI say, AI say, AI say

New. MSE ChatGPT: AI chatbot to answer money questions

Play with our experimental new tool...

Martin Lewis, MoneySavingExpert.com founder, who wrote this article and whose image links to his official MSE biography page.You'll almost all have heard of ChatGPT - the artificial intelligence chatbot is the talk of 2023 - shaking up education and information industries worldwide. Its strength and weakness is it's a 'large language model' powered by a sweep of almost all the internet. Today we're launching an unique experimental version of MSE ChatGPT - you can ask it questions and get answers powered by MSE's guides. For now, it's only available in the free MSE App (later we hope to roll it out further).

MSE's guide to the MoneySavingExpert app.To get MSE ChatGPT, download the free MSE App

If you've not tried the app yet (why not?), it's all of MSE in an app, plus some extras too. You can download it, it's free (obvs) at Apple's App Store and Google's Play Store for Android. You'll see MSE ChatGPT at the bottom menu of the app, on the right-hand side.

MSE's guide to the MoneySavingExpert app.MSE ChatGPT is a focused chatbot. It uses the standard ChatGPT underlying tech, but when you ask it questions and follow-ups, the prime information source is a weekly sweep of our guides, blogs and info. Yet that does mean it is best for 'how do you' questions rather than 'what's today's best' ones.

I wanted to build it to solve two problems. As soon as I heard about ChatGPT (early, as Mrs MSE's long been making shows on it), I had the grimace as I said we should try our own version. I hope it may help fix two issues...

The ChatGPT problem - who's providing the info? The main ChatGPT answers beautifully, and is great for writing a best man's speech. Yet it's unsourced and can get things wrong, so it's dangerous to trust it for answers, especially on your finances. And the info's outdated, it's answering from an internet sweep from 2021.

The MSE problem - how do you find the info? Ever since I set up MSE, people have always said: "There's too much information, I struggle to find what I want, can't you just tell me?" I hope that's what this new tool will do. Be aware it's EXPERIMENTAL - play with it, let it help, but always check MSE's guides before acting. This is our first try, we've worked hard and fast just to get it to this point, yet like main ChatGPT it isn't perfect. We're working on improving it (especially to get it to add key links, but that's proved tricky), and for many areas it's already a great jumping-off point for you to explore key answers. Just ALWAYS double-check the main guides before you act to be sure.

Please have a play, both because we think you'll enjoy it and find it useful, but also because it's only by people using it that we can improve it for you in the future. Please let us know what you think of MSE ChatGPT.

 
Warning. On an energy fix? CHECK NOW if your price just rocketed. If you fixed around a year ago, before the Government intervened in the energy market, check if your rates have just rocketed now the state subsidy has gone. Up to 1.3m households may be affected. If you're one of them, consider switching to a price-capped tariff. Full step-by-step help in energy fixes price hikes.

Last chance. Up to 60% off Ikea ends soon. Online and in stores till Sunday. See 22 Ikea tips and tricks.

Renew Tax Credits by 31 July, but check if you're one of 700,000 better off on UC. If you get Tax Credits, check out Tax Credits renewal help, as getting it wrong can be a nightmare. Should you shift from Tax Credits to Universal Credit? Parents with higher childcare costs are among those likely better off on Universal Credit. For full help (including big possible pitfalls), see Should I switch to Universal Credit?

School uniform sales, including 20% off M&S and £5 full set at Aldi. See our cheap uniform round-up.

Lycamobile surprises customers by switching them from O2 to the EE network. No-frills mobile operator will now piggyback off EE's mobile network. See what it means for you in Lycamobile update.

Free children's West End theatre ticket with a paying grown-up for 17 to 31 July shows. The annual August 'Kids Week' promo has been extended to include July performances of Grease, Matilda, The Wizard of Oz and 30+ more shows. Mastercard holders can get tickets now, all others from next week. 'Free' kids' theatre tickets

Come and work at MSE - money or telecoms specialists. We've two cracking roles open - if you're a banking expert, or a whizz in the mobile, broadband or energy markets, we want to hear from you. See MSE jobs.

 
 
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AT A GLANCE BEST BUYS

 

CAMPAIGN OF THE WEEK

Want to help your children or loved ones learn about the risks of cryptocurrency? According to children's online safety organisation Internet Matters, nearly a quarter of UK teens aged 13 to 16 have either already invested in cryptocurrency or are planning to. It's calling on the Government to address concerns over children being targeted by crypto schemes and scams. Visit the Internet Matters website to see how you can educate your children on the potential risks.

 

THIS WEEK'S POLL

How do you rate your mobile network? We want to find out how each provider rates for service (how it treats you) and coverage (how strong the signal is when you need it). In truth, there are only four main networks providing signals - the rest use these, but under their own brands (see our Mobile networks guide for who piggybacks on who). Please rate the firm that sends your mobile phone bill. Vote in this week's poll.

40% of MoneySavers wouldn't use an app-only bank or savings account. In last week's poll, we asked if you would ever go for a bank or savings account you could only open and manage through an app on your smartphone, and 8,200 people responded. While about half said they already had one, 42% wouldn't, citing concerns over security and privacy. Wanting to be able to speak to someone in branch was also a major factor. See the full app-only banking poll results.

 
 

MONEY MORAL DILEMMA

Is it unreasonable to ask my friends to pay me for taking them to the pub? I've two friends who usually get the bus to the pub on Fridays, while I usually drive if I'm going too. On the odd occasion when the bus isn't running or it's raining, I collect them and take them to the pub with me. But as time's gone by, they've stopped checking if the bus is running and wait for me to pick them up, and I feel I'm being taken for granted. Is it unreasonable to expect them to offer me some money for fuel, or at least return the favour every so often? Enter the Money Moral Maze: Should my friends pay me for taking them to the pub? | Suggest a Money Moral Dilemma

 
 

MARTIN'S APPEARANCES (WED 5 JUL ONWARDS)

Sat 8 Jul - Test Match Special, interview with Henry Moeran, BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra, 1pm
Tue 11 Jul - This Morning, phone-in, ITV, 10.20am
Tue 11 Jul - The Martin Lewis Money Show Live - Mortgages Special, ITV, 8pm

MSE TEAM APPEARANCES (SUBJECTS TBC)

Thu 6 Jul - BBC Radio Leicester, Mid-morning with Summaya Mughal, from 11.30am
Tue 11 Jul - BBC Radio Cambridgeshire, Mid-morning with Jeremy Sallis, from 10.45am

 

PIN JEWELLERY TO AN APRON AND BEWARE OF 'VULTURES'... WHAT ARE YOUR CAR BOOT SELLING TIPS?

That's all for this week, but before we go... a popular MSE Forum thread has some handy tips for anyone selling at car boot sales this summer. One veteran car booter says tools always sell well, but warns to be wary of forged notes. Displaying jewellery by pinning it all to an apron and wearing it, and presenting clothing on a laundry airer were nifty hacks shared, while another was to mark nicer items at double the price you actually want to leave room for haggling. But one of the most popular tips was to watch out for the 'vultures' who will try to descend on your treasure as soon as you park up. Read more in the Car boot selling tips MSE Forum discussion.

We hope you save some money,
The MSE team

 
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Martin Lewis CBE is the founder and executive chair of MSE, as well as the founder of the MMHPI charity. He's an ultra-focused MoneySaving journalist and consumer campaigner with his own prime-time ITV programme The Martin Lewis Money Show, Radio 5 Live Wednesday show Ask Martin Lewis and weekly slot on This Morning, among others. More info: See Martin Lewis' biography.

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